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The Please take a few minutes to
complete our Reader Questionnaire
1.
Readers' recommendations for new publications
We welcome readers' recommendations for new books, papers, journals, newsletters,
videos, web-pages or any other printed or audio-visual material that readers
can obtain. These suggestions will be printed on our web-page (within Environment
and Urbanization News) and in the printed journal.
Guidelines
for recommendations:
- The
recommended item must be available to other readers; please
include details of how it can be obtained and, where relevant,
its price and the publisher's address.
- Give
as much detail as possible about the item, including its title,
the names of all the authors, the publisher or institution
that published it and, if not published by a commercial publisher,
the address from which it can be obtained. If it is a commercial
publication, please include ISBN number (if available).
- The
name and e-mail address of the person recommending the item.
For
obvious reasons, authors and institutions should not recommend
their own works.
2.
Readers' recommendations for themes for future issues of Environment&Urbanization
We
welcome suggestions for themes for future issues of the journal.
Send us suggestions and these will be included in the next reader
questionnaire. The April 2003 issue had a report on readers’ preferences
for themes for future issues and how these have influenced the
themes chosen for the next two and a half years (see report below).
We also welcome comments and suggestions on any other aspects
of the journal. Write to us at eandu@iied.org or simply fill
in the feedback form below.
Below
are the themes that were listed in the questionnaire (which drew
on readers’ suggestions in a previous questionnaire). They
are listed by their overall score – with an additional
column giving the scores based on the favourite theme of each
person who returned a questionnaire. (Readers were asked to choose
their favourite theme among the ten themes listed below and to
mark all other themes that they found interesting. In the overall
score, the favourite theme was given three points, all other
themes marked as “interesting” one point.)
Please
note that issues are planned on the three top-scoring themes
in the next two and a half years.
Theme |
Overall
score |
Favourite
theme |
| 1.
Urban violence: documenting impacts, causes and responses
to how it can be addressed |
20.3 |
24.5 |
| 2.
Participatory urban governance |
17.0 |
17.0 |
| 3.
Urban livelihoods |
15.5 |
13.2 |
| 4.
Urbanization and spatial change |
8.9 |
7.5 |
| 5.
Environment and health in cities |
8.1 |
7.5 |
| 6.
New towns in low- and middle-income nations |
7.7 |
11.3 |
| 7.
Capital cities; problems and policy for the future |
7.7 |
9.4 |
| 8.
What constitutes good governance |
5.9 |
5.7 |
| 9.
Sustainable cities |
5.2 |
0 |
| 10.
Gender: a review of what has been achieved since the 1993
issue |
2.7 |
3.8 |
Here
is a summary of the themes suggested by readers for future
issues of the journal:
- Building
design in different climates
- Conflict
management in urban areas
- Counter-urbanization
- Crime
and violence in the city (this is planned for 2004)
- Disaster
mitigation in vulnerable cities
- Education,
unemployment and environment
- Energy
and cities
- Food,
water and conservation
- Industrialization,
port cities and urban health
- Information
technology
- Landscape
mosaics from rural to downtown ecotones
- Large
cities versus small towns; pros and cons
- Medium-size
cities (in part covered in April 2003)
- Monitoring
of urban development projects
- Need
for new themes to reflect urbanization trends in Africa
- New
education for cities
- NGOs
and the city
One
issue devoted to comparative studies between metropolitan areas
in Latin America; themes – ecological effects of privatization,
growth in the last 20 years and environmental changes, rural
poverty and urban migration, greening strategies for the last
ten years
- Participatory
urban planning
- Participatory
urban poverty assessments
- Policies
and prospects in an urbanizing world
- Preservation
of ancient monuments in cities
- Problems
of city transport and traffic regulation
- Rental
housing in low-income countries
- Rural–urban
interactions in different eco-regions
- Rural-urban
migration
- Upgrading
programmes and poverty reduction (to be covered by the special
issue on the Millennium Development Goals in 2005)
- Urban
agriculture; reintegrating agriculture in the city
- Urban
infrastructure provision
- Urban
planning and rehabilitation
- Urban
planning in different climates
- Urban
poverty reduction
- Urban
segregation
- Urban
water supply; privatization or private partnership (covered
in Vol 15 No 2, October 2003)
- Urbanization – effects
on land-use change
- Urbanization
in villages and ruralization in cities (in part covered in
April 2003 issue)
- Urban–rural
interactions (covered in April 2003 issue)
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